Sermons

“Speak, Lord!”

Charles Haddon Spurgeon March 20, 1884 Scripture: 1 Samuel 3:10 From: Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit Volume 43

“Speak, Lord!”

 

“Then Samuel answered, Speak; for thy servant heareth.” — 1 Samuel iii. 10.

 

THE child Samuel was favoured above all the family in which he dwelt. The Lord did not speak by night to Eli, or to any of Eli’s sons. In all that house, in all the rows of rooms that were round about the tabernacle where the ark of the Lord was kept, there was not one except Samuel to whom Jehovah spoke. The fact that the Lord should choose a child out of all that household, and that he should speak to him, ought to be very encouraging to you who think yourself to be the least likely to be recognized by God. Are you so young? Yet, probably, you are not younger than Samuel was at this time. Do you seem to be very insignificant? Yet you can hardly be more so than was this child of Hannah’s love. Have you many troubles? Yet you have not more, I daresay, than rested on young Samuel, for it must have been very hard for him while so young a child to part from his dear mother, to be so soon sent away from his father’s house, and so early made to do a servant’s work, even though it was in the house of the Lord. I have noticed how often God looks with eyes of special love upon those in a family who seem least likely to be so regarded. It was on Joseph whom his brethren hated, it was upon the crown of the head of him who was separated from his brethren, that God’s electing love descended. Why should it not come upon you? Perhaps, in the house where you live, you seem to be a stranger. Your foes are they of your own household. You have many sorrows, and you think that waters of a full cup are wrung out to you; yet the Lord may have a very special regard for you. I invite you to hope that it is so, ay, and to come to Christ, and put your soul’s trust in him; and then I am persuaded that you will find that it is so, and you will have to say, “He drew me to him with cords of a man, with bands of love. Because he loved me with everlasting love, therefore with lovingkindness has he drawn me.”

     Notice also that, while God had a very special regard for young Samuel, he had, in that regard, designs concerning the rest of the family. God’s elect are chosen, not merely for their own sake; they are chosen for God’s name’s sake, and they are also chosen for the sake of mankind in general. The Jews were chosen that they might preserve the oracles of God for all the ages, and that they might keep alight the spark of divine truth that we Gentiles might afterwards see its brightness; and when God’s special love is fixed upon one member of a family, I take it that that one ought to say to himself or herself, “Am I not called that I may be a blessing in this family?” Young Samuel was to be God’s voice to Eli, he was chosen to that end  and in a much more pleasant way than Samuel was, I trust that you, dear friend, favoured specially of God, are intended to be a messenger of better tidings than Samuel had to carry, — perhaps to an aged father whose eyes are growing dim, perhaps to some brother wayward and wandering into the world, perhaps to some sister whose heart is careless about divine things. I think the first instinct of one who has been himself called by grace is to go and call others. When Christ appears to Mary, Mary runs to the disciples to tell them that the Lord has spoken unto her. Samuel is chosen that he may carry the message to Eli; and let each believer feel that he is favoured of God that he may take a blessing to others; “for none of us liveth to himself, and no man dieth to himself.” I trust that we are not like the Dead Sea, which perpetually drinks in Jordan’s streams, but never gives the waters out, and therefore itself becomes salter and yet more salt, — the lake of death. We are not to be receivers only, taking in the good that God sends by this means or by that; but we are to pour out as fast as he pours in, working out that which God works in us to will and to do of his good pleasure.

     Our subject is to be, God speaking with us; and I trust that everyone here, who has any fear of God at all, will take the prayer of Samuel, and make it his or her own: “Speak; for thy servant heareth”

     I. And, first, I will speak to you upon THE SOUL DESIRING, desiring to be spoken to by God: “Speak, Lord.”

     Oh, how often has our heart felt this desire in the form of a groaning that cannot be uttered! “Lord, I want to know thee; thou art behind a veil, and I cannot come at thee. I know that thou art, for I see thy works; but, oh, that I could get some token from thine own self, if not for my eyesight, yet at least for my heart!” We cannot endure a dumb God. It is a very dreadful thing to have a dumb friend, a very painful thing to have a wife who never spoke with you, or a husband who could never exchange a word with you, or a father or mother from whom you could never hear a single word of love; and the heart cannot bear to have a dumb God, it wants him to speak.

     For what reason does the soul desire God to speak to it? Well, first, it desires thus to be recognized by God. It seems to say, “Speak, Lord, just to give me a token of recognition, that I may know that I am not overlooked, that I am not flung away like a useless thing upon the world’s dust heap, that I am not left to wander like a waif and stray, a derelict upon the ocean. Oh, that I may be euro that thou seest me, that thou hast some thoughts of love concerning me! How precious are thy thoughts unto me, O God! If I do not know that thou thinkest of me, I pine, I die. Speak, Lord, just to show that thou dost notice me. I am not worthy that thou shouldst regard me; but still speak to me, Lord, that I may know that thou dost observe me.”

     More than that, this desire of the soul is a longing to be called by God. When the Lord said to the child, “Samuel, Samuel,” it was a distinct, personal call, like that which came to Mary: “The Master is come, and calleth for thee,” or that which came to another Mary when the Lord said to her, “Mary,” and she turned herself, and said, “Rabboni,” that is to say, “my dear Master.” All who have heard the gospel preached have been called to some extent. The Word of God calls every sinner to repent and trust the Saviour; but that call brings nobody to Christ, unless it is accompanied by the special effectual call of the Holy Ghost. When that call is heard in the heart, then the heart responds. The general call of the gospel is like the common “cluck” of the hen which she is always giving when her chickens are around her; but if there is any danger impending, then she gives a very peculiar call, quite different from the ordinary one, and the little chicks come running as fast as ever they can, and hide for safety under her wings. That is the call we want, God’s peculiar and effectual call to his own; and I would, if I could, put into the heart and mouth of each person now present this prayer, “Speak, Lord, speak to meme. When thou art calling this one and that, Lord, call me with the effectual call of thy Holy Spirit. Be pleased so to call me that, when I hear thee saying, ‘Seek ye my face,’ my heart may say unto thee, ‘Thy face, Lord, will I seek.’”

     “Speak, Lord, moreover, that I may be instructed.” I am afraid that there are some persons who do not want to be instructed in the things of God; they are afraid of knowing too much. I know some good Christian people, — good in their way, — who cautiously avoid portions of Scripture that are contrary to their creed; and I know a good many more who, when they get hold of a text, stretch it a little, or squeeze it a little, to make it lit in with what they by prejudice conceive ought to be the truth; but that should not be your method or mine. Let us say, “Speak, Lord, and say to me what thou wilt. Whatever thou hast to say to me, Master, say on.” The Lord Jesus may perhaps reply to us, “I have many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear them now.” Howbeit, it is for us to ask him to lead us into all truth. If there is a truth that quarrels with you, depend upon it there is something in you to quarrel with; you cannot alter the truth, the simplest way is to alter yourself. It is not for us to shorten the measure, but to endeavour to come up to it. Let us lay our hearts before God, and pray him to write his truth upon them. Let us yield our understanding, and every faculty that we have, to the supreme sway of Jesus, and like Mary, sit down at his feet, and receive his gracious words. “Speak, Lord, to instruct me; tell me all about this and that truth which it is needful for me to know.”

     We sometimes mean by this expression, “Speak, Lord, for our guidance.” We have got into a great difficulty, we really do not know which way the road leads, — to the right or to the left, — and we may go blundering on, and have to come all the way back again; so we specially need the Lord to speak to us for our guidance. It is an admirable plan to do nothing without prayer, — neither to begin, nor continue, nor close anything except under divine guidance and direction. “Speak, Lord. Do give me some answer. If not by Urim and Thummim, yet by such means as thou art pleased to use in these modern times, speak, Lord; for whether thou pointest me to the right or to the left, I will go whichever way thou biddest me. Only let me hear Thy voice behind me, saying, ‘This is the way: walk ye in it.’”

     At times, also, we want the Lord’s voice for our comfort. When the heart is very heavy, there is no comfort for it except from the mouth of Christ by the Holy Spirit. You may hear the sweetest discourse, you may read the most precious chapters of Scripture, and yet your grief may not be assuaged, even in the least degree; but when the Lord Jesus Christ undertakes to speak to you, when the great Father opens his mouth, when the Holy Spirit, the Comforter, applies the truth to your heart, then are you filled with joy.

     I do not know what particular state you may be in, but this prayer of little Samuel can be turned all sorts of ways. Are you doubtful about your interest in Christ? A great many people make fun of that verse, —

“’Tis a point I long to know,
Oft it causes anxious thought,
Do I love the Lord, or no?
Am I his, or am I not?”

     If they ever find themselves where some of us have been, they will not do so any more. I believe it is a shallow experience that makes people always confident of what they are, and where they are, for there are times of terrible trouble, that make even the most confident child of God hardly know whether he is on his head or on his heels. It is the mariner who has done business on great waters who, in times of unusual stress and storm, reels to and fro, and staggers like a drunken man, and is at his wits’ end. At such a time, if Jesus whispers that I am his, then the question is answered once for all, and the soul has received a token which it waves in the face of Satan, so that he disappears, and the soul goes on its way rejoicing.

     Do pray this prayer: “Speak, Lord.” If you will not, it shall always be my prayer. I would seek the presence of my God, and cry, “As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after thee, O God. My soul thirsteth for God, for the living God: when shall I come and appear before God? My tears have been my meat day and night, while they continually say unto me, Where is thy God?” But when my heart can answer, “Here he is, he is with me,” then does my soul begin to sing at once, —

“My God, the spring of all my joys,
The life of my delights,
The glory of my brightest days,
And comfort of my nights.”

     Use the prayer of Samuel at this moment, even if you are rejoicing; and if you are beginning to wander, if you are getting heavy and dull and lukewarm, ask the Lord to speak to you so that you may be quickened out of that state, that your declining may be stopped.

     “Speak, Lord.” I have known the time — and so have some of you, — when one word of his has saved us from a grievous fall. A text of Scripture has stopped us when our feet had almost slipped. A precious thought has helped us when we were ready to despair, and when wo could not tell what to do. One word out of the inspired Book, applied to the soul by the Holy Spirit, has made a plain path before us, and we have been delivered from all our difficulties. I commend to you then, very earnestly, the personal prayer of the soul desiring: “Speak, Lord.”

     II. Now, secondly, let us think of THE LORD SPEAKING.

     Suppose that the Lord does speak to us; just think for a minute what it is. First, it is a high honour. Oh, to have a word from God! There cannot be any honour that comes from man that can for a moment be compared with having an audience with God, familiar intercourse with the Infinite, sitting down at the feet of eternal love, and listening to the voice of infallible wisdom. The peers of the realm are not so honoured when they see their Queen as you are when you see your God, and he speaks with you. To be permitted to speak with him, is a delight; but to hear him speak with us, is heaven begun below.

     And while it is so great an honour, we are bound to recollect that it is a very solemn responsibility. If any man here can say, “The Lord once spoke with me,” my brother, you are under perpetual bonds of obligation to him. Jesus Christ spoke to Saul of Tarsus out of heaven, and from that hour Paul felt himself to be the Lord’s, a consecrated man, to live and die for him who had spoken to him. “Speak, Lord;” and when thou dost speak, help us to feel the condescension of thy love, and yield ourselves up wholly to thee, because thou hast spoken to us.

     “Oh!” says one, “if God were to speak to me, I am sure it would make a change in me of a very wonderful kind.” It would, my friend; it would convert you, it would turn you right round, and start you in quite a new direction. Someone said to me, concerning Paul, that he had “a twist” at that time when he was going to Damascus, and everybody afterwards asked, “Is that Saul of Tarsus, the philosopher, the clever young Rabbi, the learned pupil of Gamaliel? Why, there he is, talking plainly and simply to those poor people, and trying to bring them to Christ, the very Christ whom he used to hate! What has made such a change in him?” “Oh!” they said, “he has had a strange twist; something has happened to him which has quite altered him.” Oh, that the Lord would make something of the same kind happen to everyone here to whom it has not yet happened! This is the mainspring of a holy life, “God has spoken to me, and I cannot live as I used to live.” This is the spur of an impetuous zeal, “Jesus Christ has spoken to me, and I must run with diligence upon his errands.” This, I believe, comes like fire-flakes upon the spirit, and sets the whole nature on a blaze. To hear God speak, to have his voice go through and through the soul, involves a great responsibility, yet he who truly feels it will never wish to shirk it.

     To hear God speak to us, will bring to us many a happy memory. I appeal to those who have heard that voice before. Do you not remember, dear friends, many places where the Lord spoke to you? You have forgotten many of the sermons which you have heard, but there is one sermon you have never forgotten, perhaps there are a dozen that you can recall if you think a little. Why do you remember them? Why, because you were in great trouble, and you went into the house of prayer, and the sermon seemed made on purpose for you. You said to the person who sat with you, “I am glad that I was here, for I am sure that, from the opening sentence to the close, it was all for me.” Or else you were getting into a very dull and stupid state, and you went to the house of God, and there was a sermon which cut you to the very quick, and woke you up. You never could go back to where you were before God spoke to you. No, we can never forget these voices — sweet yet strong, — which thrill our very soul, which wind not through the ear, and so waste half their strength, but come directly to the heart, and in the heart enshrine themselves! Oh, yes; if God has spoken to you, your heart will dance at the memory of the many times in which he has done so!

     I think I must also say that it is a probable mercy that God will speak to you. I know that, if you are a father, it is not improbable that you will speak to your child; and our Heavenly Father will speak to his children, and the Lord Jesus Christ, who is married to us surely will not be a silent Husband, but will be willing to speak to us, and to reveal his heart to us. Only pray just now, “Speak, Lord! Speak, Lord!” and he will speak. I feel encouraged to expect that he who died for me, will speak to me. He who did not hesitate to reveal himself in human flesh, bearing our infirmities and sorrows, surely will not hide himself from his own flesh now. He will not be here among us according to his promise, “Lo, I am with you alway,” and yet never speak to us at all. Oh, no; he waits to be gracious! Therefore, let not our prayers be restrained, but let us cry, “Speak, Lord, for thy servant heareth.”

     “But how does the Lord speak?” someone asks. That is a very important question. I know that he has many ways of speaking to the hearts of his people. We do not expect to hear audible words; it is not by sense that we live, — not even by the sense of hearing, — but by faith. We believe, and so we apprehend God.

     God often speaks to his children through his ivories. Are there not days when the mountains and the hills break forth before us into singing, and the trees of the field clap their hands, because God is speaking by them? Do you not lift up your eyes to the heavens at night, and watch the stars, and seem to hear God speaking to you in the solemn silence? That man who never hears God speak through his works is, I think, hardly in a healthy state of mind. Why, the very beauty of spring with its promise, the fulness of summer, the ripeness of autumn, and even the chilly blasts of winter, are all vocal if we have but ears to hear what they say. God also speaks to his children very loudly by his providence. Is there no voice in affliction? Has pain no tongue? Has the bed of languishing no eloquence? The Lord speaks to us sometimes by bereavement: when one after another has been taken away, God has spoken to us. The deaths of others are for our spiritual life, — sharp physic for our soul’s health. God has spoken to many a mother by the dear babe she has had to lay in the grave, and many a man has for the first time listened to God’s voice when he has hoard the passing bell that spoke of the departure of one dearer to him than life itself. God speaks to us, if we will but hear, in all the arrangements of providence both pleasant and painful. Whether he caresses or chastises, there is a voice in all that he does. Oh, that we were not so deaf!

     But the Lord speaks to us chiefly through his Word. Oh, what converse God has with his people when they are quietly reading their Bibles! There, in your still room, as you have been reading a chapter, have you not felt as if God spoke those words straight to your heart there and then? Has not Christ himself said to you, while you have been reading his Word, “Let not your heart be troubled: ye believe in God, believe also in me”? The text does not seem to be like an old letter in a book; rather is it like a fresh speech newly spoken from the mouth of the Lord to you. It has been so, dear friends, has it not?

     Then there is his Word as it is preached; it is delightful to notice how God speaks to the heart while the sermon is being heard, — ay, and when the sermon is being read. I am almost every day made to sing inwardly as I hear of those to whom I have been the messenger of God; and my Lord has many messengers, and he is speaking by them all. There was one man, who had lived a life of drunkenness and unchastity, and had even shed human blood with his bowie knife or his revolver, yet he found the Saviour, and became a new man; and when he died, he charged one who was with him to tell me that my sermon had brought him to Christ. “I shall never tell him on earth,” he said, “but I shall tell the Lord Jesus Christ about him when I get to heaven.” It was by a sermon, read far away in the backwoods, that this great sinner was brought to Christ; but it is not only in the backwoods that the Lord blesses the preached Word, it is here, it is everywhere where Christ is proclaimed. If we preach the gospel, God gives a voice to it, and speaks through it. There is a kind of incarnation of the Spirit of God in every true preacher; God speaks through him. Oh, that men had but ears to hear! But, alas, alas! too often they hear as if it were of no importance; and the Lord has to say to his servant as he said to Ezekiel, “Lo, thou art unto them as a very lovely song of one that hath a pleasant voice, and can play well on an instrument: for they hear thy words, but they do them not.” Oh, that each one of our hearers always came up to the sanctuary with this prayer in his heart, and on his lips, “Speak, Lord, by thy servant; speak right down into my soul.”

     But the Lord has a way of sometimes speaking to the heart by his Spirit, — I think not usually apart from his Word, — but yet there are certain feelings and emotions, tendernesses and tremblings, joys and delights, which we cannot quite link with any special portion of Scripture laid home to the heart, but which seem to steal upon us unawares by the direct operation of the Spirit of God upon the heart. You who know the Lord must sometimes have felt a strange delight which had no earthly origin. You have, perhaps, awakened in the morning with it, and it has remained with you. A little while after, you have had some severe trial, and you realize that the Lord had spoken to you to strengthen you to bear the affliction. At other times, you have felt great tenderness about some one individual, and you have felt constrained to pray, and perhaps to go for some miles to speak a word to that individual, and it turned out that God meant to save that person through you, and he did so. I think we are not half as mindful as we ought to be of the secret working of the Holy Spirit upon the mind. There are certain fanatics who get delirious, and dream that they are prophets, and I know not what; but we just put them on one side. This is a very different thing from being guided by the Spirit of God in all the actions of life so as to obey the will of the Lord, sometimes in cases where we might not have known it to be his will, or might have omitted it. Whenever you feel moved to do anything that is good, do it. Do it even without being moved, because it is your duty, for “to him that knoweth to do good, and doeth it not, to him it is sin.” But, above all, when there comes a gracious influence on the conscience, a gentle reminder to the heart, quickly and speedily do as the Spirit prompts, taking note within your heart that the Lord has laid this particular burden upon you, and you must not cast it from you. I should like to imitate one dear man of God with whom I sometimes commune. On one occasion, he seemed to feel in his soul that he must go to a little port in France to deliver the Lord’s message, and as the boat went in, a person on the quay spoke to him, and he said, “You are the one to whom I was sent.” Within a month, that godly man was in Russia, seeking the souls of others of whom he knew nothing; but God had guided him, and they were brought to the Saviour’s feet. I know him as one who, I believe, lives so near to God that the Lord speaks to him otherwise than he does to the most of men, for all Christians are not alike favoured in this respect. One may be a child of God, like Eli, and yet so live that God will not speak with him; and, on the other hand, one may be a child like Samuel, obedient, beautiful in character, and watchful to know God’s will, praying, “Speak, Lord; for thy servant heareth;” and then God will speak to you. It is not to all that he speaks, but he would speak to all if they were ready to learn what he had to say.

     III. Now I must close with just a few words upon the last part of my subject, which is, THE SOUL HEARING. We have had the soul desiring, and the Lord speaking; now for the soul hearing: “Speak, Lord; for thy servant heareth.”

     And, first, I think we have here an argument: “Lord, do speak, for I do hear.” “There are none so deaf as those that will not hear;’ so I fear that some people are very deaf indeed. But, oh, when you feel, “Only let the Lord speak, I will hear; only let him come to me, and I will set the door wide open for him to enter, glad if he, my gracious God, will come and be a sojourner with me,” — he will come, he will speak to you. It is a good argument, and you may use it if you can; God help you to do so!

     Yet it appears to be an inference, as well as an argument, for it seems to run like this, “Lord, if thou speakest, of course thy servant heareth.” Shall God speak, and his servant not hear? God forbid! Strangers and sojourners may not listen, but his servant will. “Speak, Lord; for if thou wilt but speak, I must hear. There is such a force about thy voice, such wisdom about what thou sayest, that hear thee I must and will.” It is an argument from God speaking, but it is also an inference from God speaking.

     “Speak, Lord; for thy servant heareth,” seems also to contain a promise within it, namely, that if the Lord will but speak, we will hear. I am afraid that, sometimes, we really do not listen to God. Suppose that we pray the Lord to speak to us, and when we have done praying we go away, and engage in worldly conversation, this is surely not acting consistently. I remember being asked to see a person, and I thought that he wanted to learn something from me; but when I saw him for three-quarters of an hour, he spoke the whole time, and afterwards he told a friend that I was a most delightful person to converse with! When I was told that, I said, “Oh, yes, that was because I did not interrupt the man! He was wound up, and I let him run down.” But conversation means two people talking, does it not? It cannot be a conversation if I do all the talking, or if my friend does it all; so, in conversing with God, there must be, as we say, turn and turn about. You speak with God, and then sit still, and let God speak with you; and, if he does not at once speak to your heart, open his Book, and read a few verses, and let him speak to you that way. Some people cannot pray when they wish to do so. I remember George Muller sweetly saying, “When you come to your time for devotion, if you cannot pray, do not try. If you cannot speak with God, do not try. Let God speak with you. Open your Bible, and read a passage.” Sometimes, when you meet a friend, you cannot begin a conversation. Well then, let your friend begin it; then you can reply to him, and the conversation will go on merrily enough. So, if you cannot speak to God, let God speak to you. It is also true communion with the Lord, sometimes, just to sit still, and look up, and say nothing, but just, “in solemn silence of the mind,” find your heaven and your God. “Speak, Lord; for thy servant heareth. I have prayed to thee, I have told thee my grief, and now I am just sitting still to hear if thou hast anything to say to me. I am all ear, and all heart. If thou wilt command me, I will obey. If thou wilt comfort me, I will believe. If thou wilt reprove me, I will meekly bow my head. If thou wilt give me the assurance of thy love, my heart shall dance at every sound of thy voice. Only speak, Lord; for thy servant heareth.”

     I have finished my discourse; but I do wish that some poor sinner here would say, before he goes away, “Lord, speak to me! Speak to my soul. Let this be the last night of my spiritual death, and the birth-night of my spiritual life.” As for you who love the Lord, I am sure that you will pray this prayer, and that you will keep on praying, “Speak, Lord; for thy servant heareth;” and then what blessed conversations there will be between you and your Father in heaven! The Lord bless you all, for Jesus’ sake! Amen.